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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Adaptive protocols for information dissemination in wireless sensor networks

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TLDR
It is found that the SPIN protocols can deliver 60% more data for a given amount of energy than conventional approaches, and that, in terms of dissemination rate and energy usage, the SPlN protocols perform close to the theoretical optimum.
Abstract
In this paper, we present a family of adaptive protocols, called SPIN (Sensor Protocols for Information via Negotiation), that efficiently disseminates information among sensors in an energy-constrained wireless sensor network. Nodes running a SPIN communication protocol name their data using high-level data descriptors, called meta-data. They use meta-data negotiations to eliminate the transmission of redundant data throughout the network. In addition, SPIN nodes can base their communication decisions both upon application-specific knowledge of the data and upon knowledge of the resources that are available to them. This allows the sensors to efficiently distribute data given a limited energy supply. We simulate and analyze the performance of two specific SPIN protocols, comparing them to other possible approaches and a theoretically optimal protocol. We find that the SPIN protocols can deliver 60% more data for a given amount of energy than conventional approaches. We also find that, in terms of dissemination rate and energy usage, the SPlN protocols perform close to the theoretical optimum.

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A survey of wireless sensor network security and routing techniques

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Energy efficient information dissemination protocols by negotiation for wireless sensor networks

TL;DR: The theoretical analysis and simulation results show significant energy savings of the proposed protocols over the previous protocols for the similar goal.
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Cooperative computing in sensor networks

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a distributed computing model, Cooperative Computing, and the Smart Messages software architecture for programming large networks of embedded systems, where distributed applications are dynamic collections of migratory execution units working to achieve a common goal.
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